- Author
- Grumer, J. | Miller, L. F. | Bruszak, A. E. | Dalverny, L. E.
- Title
- Minimum Extinguishant and Maximum Oxygen Concentrations for Extinguishing Coal Dust-Air Explosions.
- Coporate
- Bureau of Mines, Pittsburgh, PA
- Report
- RI 7782, 1973, 9 p.
- Keywords
- coal dusts | dust explosions | oxygen concentration | extinguishing | fire extinguishers | mine fires | Purple K
- Identifiers
- effective weight percentages of extinguishants of Pittsburgh seam coal dust-air explosions; flame speeds of coal dust-air mixtures; average weight-percent of extinguishant of coal dust-air flames in Godbert-Greenwald apparatus
- Abstract
- In addition to nine powder and gaseous extinguishants of propagating Pittsburgh seam coal dust-air explosions earlier evaluated, 10 other powders have similarly been evaluated under like conditions such that wall quenching of the coal dust-air flames was virtually absent and the dust concentration was temporally and spatially uniform to within about ±5 percent. None of the newly examined extinguishants was better than Purple-K (potassium bicarbonate); the 10 of this report are anhydrite (calcium sulfate), monobasic (4 types) and dibasic ammonium phosphate, natural and synthetic cryolite (sodium fluoaluminate), sodium sulfate, and tricalcium phosphate. Except for anhydrite, sodium sulfate, tricalcium phosphate, and the cryolites, these materials were about equally effective, when present in relatively low concentrations (weight-percent of the coal dust-extinguishant mixture). The maximum oxygen concentration for the extinguishment of otherwise uninhibited coal dust explosions and the influence of coal dust particle size and the volatile content of the coal were also explored. For the present, the choice of the inhibitor among the good ones evaluated is not as critical as the system to be used to deploy the extinguishant against a coal dust explosion.